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🌈 A simple implementation example with and without email-templates using mailer module for nest js built on top of nodemailer.

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Nest Logo

Demo implementation on the mailer modules for Nest framework (node.js) using Nodemailer library

Nestjs-mailer starter kit / project for your NestJs project.

Goals

The main goal of this kit is to quickly get you started on your project with Nestjs Mailer, bringing a solid layout foundation to work upon.

Usage

Import the MailerModule into the root AppModule

Synchronous import

//app.module.ts
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerModule } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';  
import { HandlebarsAdapter } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer/dist/adapters/handlebars.adapter';

@Module({
  imports: [
    MailerModule.forRoot({
      transport: {
        host: 'smtp.example.com',
        port: 587,
        secure: false, // upgrade later with STARTTLS
        auth: {
          user: "username",
          pass: "password",
        },
      },
      defaults: {
        from:'"nest-modules" <modules@nestjs.com>',
      },
      template: {
        dir: process.cwd() + '/templates/',
        adapter: new HandlebarsAdapter(), // or new PugAdapter()
        options: {
          strict: true,
        },
      },
    }),
  ],
})
export class AppModule {}

Asynchronous import

//app.module.ts
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerModule } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';  
import { HandlebarsAdapter } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer/dist/adapters/handlebars.adapter';

@Module({
  imports: [
    MailerModule.forRootAsync({
      useFactory: () => ({
        transport: {
          host: 'smtp.example.com',
          port: 587,
          secure: false, // upgrade later with STARTTLS
          auth: {
            user: "username",
            pass: "password",
          },
        },
        defaults: {
          from:'"nest-modules" <modules@nestjs.com>',
        },
        template: {
          dir: process.cwd() + '/templates/',
          adapter: new HandlebarsAdapter(), // or new PugAdapter() or new EjsAdapter()
          options: {
            strict: true,
          },
        },
      }),
    }),
  ],
})
export class AppModule {}
  • We have used Handlebars in above example, for EJS and Pug use below mentioned example of adapter import

Pug

//app.module.ts
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerModule } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';  
import { PugAdapter } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer/dist/adapters/pug.adapter';

EJS

//app.module.ts
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerModule } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';  
import { EjsAdapter } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer/dist/adapters/ejs.adapter';

After this, MailerService will be available to inject across entire project, for example in this way :

import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerService } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';

@Injectable()
export class ExampleService {
  constructor(private readonly mailerService: MailerService) {}
}

MailerProvider exports the sendMail() function to which you can pass the message options (sender, email subject, recipient, body content, etc)

sendMail() accepts the same fields as nodemailer email message

import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { MailerService } from '@nestjs-modules/mailer';

@Injectable()
export class ExampleService {
  constructor(private readonly mailerService: MailerService) {}
  
  public example(): void {
    this
      .mailerService
      .sendMail({
        to: 'test@nestjs.com', // list of receivers
        from: 'noreply@nestjs.com', // sender address
        subject: 'Testing Nest MailerModule βœ”', // Subject line
        text: 'welcome', // plaintext body
        html: '<b>welcome</b>', // HTML body content
      })
      .then((success) => {
        console.log(success)
      })
      .catch((err) => {
        console.log(err)
      });
  }
  
  public example2(): void {
    this
      .mailerService
      .sendMail({
        to: 'test@nestjs.com',
        from: 'noreply@nestjs.com',
        subject: 'Testing Nest Mailermodule with template βœ”',
        template: 'index', // The `.pug` or `.hbs` extension is appended automatically.
        context: {  // Data to be sent to template engine.
          code: 'cf1a3f828287',
          username: 'john doe',
        },
      })
       .then((success) => {
        console.log(success)
      })
      .catch((err) => {
        console.log(err)
      });
  }
  
  public example3(): void {
    this
      .mailerService
      .sendMail({
        to: 'test@nestjs.com',
        from: 'noreply@nestjs.com',
        subject: 'Testing Nest Mailermodule with template βœ”',
        template: '/index', // The `.pug` or `.hbs` extension is appended automatically.
        context: {  // Data to be sent to template engine.
          code: 'cf1a3f828287',
          username: 'john doe',
        },
      })
      .then((success) => {
        console.log(success)
      })
      .catch((err) => {
        console.log(err)
      });
  }
}

Make a template named folder at the root level of the project and keep all the email-templates in the that folder with .hbs extension. This implementation uses handlebars as a view-engine and outlook as the smtp.

Configuration

Dotenv module has been used for sender's email and password keep. This kit is implemented with outlook smtp, while we can make changes in the app.module.ts configurations for other services. As the nestjs-mailer is built on top of nodemailer, the required configurations can be found here Nodemailer / smtp.

Special thanks to https://github.com/leemunroe/responsive-html-email-template for providing email-templates